From weilercs at whitman.edu Tue Aug 12 11:06:21 2008 From: weilercs at whitman.edu (Susan Weiler) Date: Tue, 12 Aug 2008 09:06:21 -0700 Subject: [DIALOGnews] news Message-ID: <8D5053D9-936F-45CA-B24A-6E5F24D04BDA@whitman.edu> Handle With Care from the New York Times (Registration Required) Last year, a private company proposed "fertilizing" parts of the ocean with iron, in hopes of encouraging carbon-absorbing blooms of plankton. Meanwhile, researchers elsewhere are talking about injecting chemicals into the atmosphere, launching sun-reflecting mirrors into stationary orbit above the earth or taking other steps to reset the thermostat of a warming planet. This technology might be useful, even life-saving. But it would inevitably produce environmental effects impossible to predict and impossible to undo. So a growing number of experts say it is time for broad discussion of how and by whom it should be used, or if it should be tried at all. Similar questions are being raised about nanotechnology, robotics and other powerful emerging technologies. There are even those who suggest humanity should collectively decide to turn away from some new technologies as inherently dangerous. http://snipurl.com/3f9yz ********** C. Susan Weiler, Ph.D. Office for Earth System Studies Tel: 509-527-5948 Whitman College Fax: 509-527-5961 Walla Walla, WA 99362 weiler at whitman.edu Interdisciplinary Training for Ph.D. Graduates Climate-Change and impacts: http://disccrs.org IPY New Generation of Polar Researchers http://www.arcticportal.org/apecs/ngpr -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://aslo.org/pipermail/dialognews/attachments/20080812/e4100c34/attachment.html